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The Role of p53 in Suppression of KSHV Cyclin-induced Lymphomagenesis

Emmy W. Verschuren, John Hodgson, Joe W. Gray, Scott C. Kogan, Nic Jones, Gérard I. Evan

Cancer Research · 2004 · ▲ 78 citations

Abstract

Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) encodes a cyclin D homolog, K cyclin, that is thought to promote viral oncogenesis. However, expression of K cyclin in cultured cells not only triggers cell cycle progression but also engages the p53 tumor suppressor pathway, which probably restricts the oncogenic potential of K cyclin. Therefore, to assess the tumorigenic properties of K cyclin in vivo, we transgenically targeted expression of K cyclin to the B and T lymphocyte compartments via the E micro promoter/enhancer. Around 17% of E micro -K cyclin animals develop lymphoma by 9 months of age, and all such lymphomas exhibit loss of p53. A critical role of p53 in suppressing K cyclin-induced lymphomagenesis was confirmed by the greatly accelerated onset of B and T lymphomagenesis in all E micro -K cyclin/p53(-/-) mice. However, absence of p53 did not appear to accelerate K cyclin-induced lymphomagenesis by averting apoptosis: E micro -K cyclin/p53(-/-) end-stage lymphomas contained abundant apoptotic cells, and transgenic E micro -K cyclin/p53(-/-) lymphocytes in vitro were not measurably protected from DNA damage-induced apoptosis compared with E micro -K cyclin/p53(wt) cells. Notably, whereas aneuploidy was frequently evident in pre-lymphomatous tissues, end-stage E micro -K cyclin/p53(-/-) tumors showed a near-diploid DNA content with no aberrant centrosome numbers. Nonetheless, such tumor cells did harbor more restricted genomic alterations, such as single-copy chromosome losses or gains or high-level amplifications. Together, our data support a model in which K cyclin-induced genome instability arises early in the pre-tumorigenic lymphocyte population and that loss of p53 licenses subsequent expansion of tumorigenic clones.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1158/0008-5472.can-03-1863
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2026-06-02 MST

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APA
Verschuren, E.W., Hodgson, J., Gray, J.W., Kogan, S.C., Jones, N., &amp; Evan, G.I. (2004). The Role of p53 in Suppression of KSHV Cyclin-induced Lymphomagenesis. <em>Cancer Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-03-1863
Vancouver
Verschuren EW, Hodgson J, Gray JW, Kogan SC, Jones N, Evan GI. The Role of p53 in Suppression of KSHV Cyclin-induced Lymphomagenesis. Cancer Research. 2004. doi:10.1158/0008-5472.can-03-1863.
BibTeX
@article{emmy2004TheRol, title = {The Role of p53 in Suppression of KSHV Cyclin-induced Lymphomagenesis}, author = {Emmy W. Verschuren and John Hodgson and Joe W. Gray and Scott C. Kogan and Nic Jones and Gérard I. Evan}, journal = {Cancer Research}, year = {2004}, doi = {10.1158/0008-5472.can-03-1863}, }

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